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BTS: O Reencontro (2026)

BTS: 더 리턴 ‧ Movie ‧ 2026
BTS: O Reencontro (2026) poster
9.0
Sua Avaliação: 0/10
Avaliações: 9.0/10 de 1,259 usuários
# de Fãs: 1,896
Resenhas: 4 usuários
Classificado #67
Popularidade #7428
Fãs 1,259

Confira os bastidores do aguardado retorno dos reis do k-pop, BTS. Acompanhe em primeira mão a jornada de dúvidas, alegrias e redescobertas dos sete integrantes da banda que voltaram ao estúdio, criaram músicas novas e lançaram o comeback da década! Com direção do aclamado Bao Nguyen ("O Freelancer: O Homem Por Trás da Foto", "A Noite que Mudou o Pop") e produção da This Machine ("Martha", "Karol G: Mañana Fue Muy Bonito") e da HYBE. (Fonte: Netflix Brasil) Editar Tradução

  • Português (Brasil)
  • Русский
  • English
  • Italiano
  • País: South Korea
  • Tipo: Movie
  • Data de Lançamento: Mar 27, 2026
  • Duração: 1 hr. 34 min.
  • Pontuação: 9.0 (scored by 1,259 usuários)
  • Classificado: #67
  • Popularidade: #7428
  • Classificação do Conteúdo: 13+ - Teens 13 or older

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Fotos

BTS: O Reencontro Korean Movie(2026) photo
BTS: O Reencontro Korean Movie(2026) photo
BTS: O Reencontro Korean Movie(2026) photo

Resenhas

Completados
AshOnFire1808
5 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
Mar 27, 2026
Completados 0
No geral 10
História 10
Acting/Cast 10
Musical 10
Voltar a ver 10

Happy to be home.

I had the strongest feeling of coming home. I remember the day that the announcement came that they were gonna go on hiatus, and it was such a, such a bad day. And I honestly did not think I would make it, but here I am four years later, and I get to experience BTS coming back in real time. And I'll tell you, there is no stronger feeling than coming home. That's it. This whole documentary was so insightful and so beautiful, and my chest is feeling so heavy. And it wasn't even like a sad, depressing documentary. No, it was showcasing everything they have been through, everything they did to get here, and it was utterly beautiful. It was like coming home. It was like watching a family movie, because they are our family. It's watching people you love be happy, be sad, be in pain, and achieve everything they have dreamed of. I really don't know how to explain it, except that it felt like coming home.

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Completados
lovelydove419
16 pessoas acharam esta resenha útil
Mar 28, 2026
Completados 3
No geral 5.0
História 8.0
Acting/Cast 10
Musical 5.0
Voltar a ver 1.0

WHAT REALLY WERE THEY TRYING TO DO WITH ARIRANG?

What were they really trying to do with *Arirang*?

I’ve been an ARMY for seven years. I love BTS, and I was extremely excited for their new album and documentary—unfortunately, I didn’t enjoy either.

*Arirang* felt very different from what I’m used to. I understand they were aiming for a more mature sound, but it ended up feeling more like a product than BTS. They’ve done mellow songs before—“House of Cards,” “Black Swan,” and “Life Goes On”—but “Swim,” the lead single, felt like the wrong choice. It was too low-energy and lacked impact.

Since the album is called *Arirang*, I expected more Korean-inspired sounds. Instead, it felt geared toward a global—especially Western—audience. Even in the documentary, BTS seemed to want to focus on Korea, while HYBE pushed for a more global direction. As a non-Korean fan, I was drawn to BTS because of their Korean music. I didn’t know their names or personalities at first—I just loved songs like “Boyz with Fun” and “Attack on Bangtan.” The “K” in K-pop matters, and it feels like companies are starting to forget that.

The documentary constantly emphasized “going global,” but at what cost? Why frame something like “Arirang” for Western validation when it’s a deeply Korean cultural piece? It made me question what the project was really about. Some people may call me a hater or a fake fan, but I believe criticism is part of being a real fan. Chart numbers and views don’t necessarily reflect genuine appreciation—BTS are musicians, and their music should come first.

It also felt like the documentary tried to make *Arirang* appeal to everyone except Koreans themselves, which came across as distasteful. For example, when they mentioned the story of seven Korean boys who went to Washington, D.C. in the 1800s, they left out the fact that most institutions rejected them—except Howard University. That context matters. The lack of acknowledgment felt disappointing, especially given the historical significance.

Even visually, there seems to be a pattern of appealing more to Western audiences. For an album like *Arirang*, I expected stronger Korean representation, but that wasn’t always the case. It raises the question: were they celebrating their culture, or trying to reshape it for Western approval?

I’m still a fan, and I’ll always support BTS, but these are important conversations to have. *Arirang* isn’t a bad album—it’s just not their best. You can disagree, because music is subjective, but we shouldn’t place artists above criticism. Critiquing them is part of appreciating them—it shows we understand the difference between loving BTS and loving their music.

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Detalhes

  • Título: BTS: O Reencontro
  • Tipo: Movie
  • Format: Documentary Film
  • País: Coreia do Sul
  • Data de Lançamento: Mar 27, 2026
  • Duração: 1 hr. 34 min.
  • Classificação do Conteúdo: 13+ - 13 anos ou mais

Estatísticas

  • Pontuação: 9.0 (avaliado por 1,259 usuários)
  • Classificado: #67
  • Popularidade: #7428
  • Fãs: 1,896

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